And I've gotten stuck on per circuitum. I know what it should mean, 'all around' or 'by every way', I'm just unsure of its literal meaning, although I think it's 'all along a circuit'. Any help would be appreciated.

Salve Nooj
According to Lewis & Short ( http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/pt ... 99.04.0059 ):
circuitus = the space around a building; circuit, compass, a way around; circling, revolution
per circuitum = all along the perimeter; by a circling--in an encircling way;
vallo -are -avi -atus per circuitum --to hedge on every side (according to one translation), intrench, circumvallate -- synonym for saepio --to hedge or enclose

If you look at the entry for si, section II.B., si can be used with an implicit verb. So I think that works here and you get "...he possesses, and [see] whether he will not curse you to your face." (That seems equivalent to "...and he will surely curse you to your face" which the Greek version has, both with the odd bless means curse thing.)

Woops, I must have been distracted, my previous post was left hanging.

modus.irrealis wrote:If you look at the entry for si, section II.B., si can be used with an implicit verb. So I think that works here and you get "...he possesses, and [see] whether he will not curse you to your face."

That makes a lot of sense. Thank you.

modus.irrealis wrote:(That seems equivalent to "...and he will surely curse you to your face" which the Greek version has, both with the odd bless means curse thing.)

If I remember correctly, the editors did this so as not to impeach upon God, even though it was a character doing it.